A recent set of data is quite sobering: Bitcoin spot ETFs have experienced net outflows for six consecutive trading days, and Ethereum spot ETFs have been bleeding for three days. This is not just minor volatility, but a real signal of Wall Street voting with their wallets.



Think about it, these compliant channels were originally the main avenues for institutional capital to enter the market. What does continuous outflow mean now? There are only two possibilities: either the market can only rely on retail leverage to force a rebound (how long this "prosperity" can last is really uncertain), or it has to keep crashing further until institutions find it so cheap they have to step in.

There have been many similar moments in history. During the last ETF outflow period, Bitcoin fell over 30%. The story of BlackRock (IBIT) continuously attracting funds now looks battered. Grayscale (GBTC) is even more outrageous, with over $300 million flowing out daily. Frankly, these former "funding vacuum cleaners" have now become "bloodletting pumps" for the market.

The more dangerous part is here—each rebound currently lacks spot support. Perpetual contract funding rates on exchanges are soaring, while spot ETF outflows continue. The stark contrast between these two data points is very eye-catching. It’s obvious that leveraged longs are dancing on the edge of a knife; any slight disturbance could trigger a chain of liquidations.

In essence, institutions are gradually reducing their positions, while retail traders are still playing with fire. Every rebound you might think is a "once-in-a-lifetime buying opportunity" could very well be the last supper on the edge of the abyss. Watching the death cross of ETF data and funding rates can reveal the true temperature of the market.
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NonFungibleDegenvip
· 8h ago
ngl ser this is getting spicy... institutions dumping and retail still aping in with 100x leverage??? that's giving last supper energy fr fr
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StakeOrRegretvip
· 8h ago
Grayscale is moving $300 million out every day, this guy is really cutting losses... Institutions are fleeing, retail investors are still going all-in, I've seen this script too many times. Wait, no spot support for the rebound? Then it's purely leverage self-indulgence. The lessons of history are right there, ETF outflows mean bad news, get mentally prepared to cut losses. BlackRock's story is now indeed riddled with scars, it's really ironic. Perpetual fee rates soaring while holding spot assets is a truly glaring combo... Bottom-fishing opportunities are still death traps, it all depends on whether you bet right or not.
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SlowLearnerWangvip
· 8h ago
Here I go again, only realizing after the fact. I only understand what happened after hearing the story. BlackRock is attracting funds, and Grayscale is bleeding assets. This explanation makes me shiver; I feel like every time I buy the dip, I'm just handing over my money to the institutions. Are those rebounds really the last supper on the edge of the abyss? I've already had my fill.
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FloorSweepervip
· 8h ago
Gray scale is moving out 300 million daily. Those who still dare to buy the dip are really warriors.
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